20 KiB
OPTIONS
General options
To see general usage help, including general options which are
supported by most hledger commands, run hledger -h.
General help options:
helpoptions
General input options:
inputoptions
General reporting options:
reportingoptions
Command options
To see options for a particular command, including command-specific
options, run: hledger COMMAND -h.
Command-specific options must be written after the command name, eg:
hledger print -x.
Additionally, if the command is an addon, you
may need to put its options after a double-hyphen, eg:
hledger ui -- --watch. Or, you can run the addon executable
directly: hledger-ui --watch.
Command arguments
Most hledger commands accept arguments after the command name, which are often a query, filtering the data in some way.
Argument files
You can save a set of command line options/arguments in a file, one
per line, and then reuse them by writing @FILENAME in a
command line. To prevent this expansion of @-arguments,
precede them with a -- argument. For more, see Save
frequently used options.
Special characters
Option and argument values which contain problematic characters
should be escaped with double quotes, backslashes, or (best) single
quotes. Problematic characters means spaces, and also characters which
are significant to your command shell, such as less-than/greater-than.
Eg:
hledger register -p 'last year' "accounts receivable (receivable|payable)" amt:\>100.
Characters which are significant both to the shell and in regular expressions sometimes need to be
double-escaped. These include parentheses, the pipe symbol and the
dollar sign. Eg, to match the dollar symbol, bash users should do:
hledger balance cur:'\$' or
hledger balance cur:\\$.
When hledger is invoking an addon executable (like hledger-ui),
options and arguments get de-escaped once more, so you might need
triple-escaping. Eg: hledger ui cur:'\\$' or
hledger ui cur:\\\\$ in bash. (The number of backslashes in
fish shell is left as an exercise for the reader.)
Inside a file used for argument
expansion, one less level of escaping is enough. (And in this case,
backslashes seem to work better than quotes. Eg:
cur:\$).
If in doubt, keep things simple:
- run add-on executables directly
- write options after the command
- enclose problematic args in single quotes
- if needed, also add a backslash to escape regexp metacharacters
If you’re really stumped, add --debug=2 to
troubleshoot.
Input files
hledger reads transactions from a data file (and the add command
writes to it). By default this file is
$HOME/.hledger.journal (or on Windows, something like
C:/Users/USER/.hledger.journal). You can override this with
the $LEDGER_FILE environment variable:
$ setenv LEDGER_FILE ~/finance/2016.journal
$ hledger stats
or with the -f/--file option:
$ hledger -f /some/file stats
The file name - (hyphen) means standard input:
$ cat some.journal | hledger -f-
Usually the data file is in hledger’s journal format, but it can also be one of several other formats, listed below. hledger detects the format automatically based on the file extension, or if that is not recognised, by trying each built-in “reader” in turn:
| Reader: | Reads: | Used for file extensions: |
|---|---|---|
journal |
hledger’s journal format, also some Ledger journals | .journal .j .hledger
.ledger |
timeclock |
timeclock files (precise time logging) | .timeclock |
timedot |
timedot files (approximate time logging) | .timedot |
csv |
comma-separated values (data interchange) | .csv |
If needed (eg to ensure correct error messages when a file has the “wrong” extension), you can force a specific reader/format by prepending it to the file path with a colon. Examples:
$ hledger -f csv:/some/csv-file.dat stats
$ echo 'i 2009/13/1 08:00:00' | hledger print -ftimeclock:-
You can also specify multiple -f options, to read
multiple files as one big journal. There are some limitations with
this:
- directives in one file will not affect the other files
- balance assertions will not see any account balances from previous files
If you need those, either use the include directive, or
concatenate the files, eg:
cat a.journal b.journal | hledger -f- CMD.
Smart dates
hledger’s user interfaces accept a flexible “smart date” syntax (unlike dates in the journal file). Smart dates allow some english words, can be relative to today’s date, and can have less-significant date parts omitted (defaulting to 1).
Examples:
2004/10/1,
2004-01-01, 2004.9.1 |
exact date, several separators allowed. Year is 4+ digits, month is 1-12, day is 1-31 |
2004 |
start of year |
2004/10 |
start of month |
10/1 |
month and day in current year |
21 |
day in current month |
october, oct |
start of month in current year |
yesterday, today, tomorrow |
-1, 0, 1 days from today |
last/this/next day/week/month/quarter/year |
-1, 0, 1 periods from the current period |
20181201 |
8 digit YYYYMMDD with valid year month and day |
201812 |
6 digit YYYYMM with valid year and month |
Counterexamples - malformed digit sequences might give surprising results:
201813 |
6 digits with an invalid month is parsed as start of 6-digit year |
20181301 |
8 digits with an invalid month is parsed as start of 8-digit year |
20181232 |
8 digits with an invalid day gives an error |
201801012 |
9+ digits beginning with a valid YYYYMMDD gives an error |
Report start & end date
Most hledger reports show the full span of time represented by the journal data, by default. So, the effective report start and end dates will be the earliest and latest transaction or posting dates found in the journal.
Often you will want to see a shorter time span, such as the current
month. You can specify a start and/or end date using -b/--begin, -e/--end, -p/--period or a date: query (described below). All of
these accept the smart date syntax. One
important thing to be aware of when specifying end dates: as in Ledger,
end dates are exclusive, so you need to write the date after
the last day you want to include.
Examples:
-b 2016/3/17 |
begin on St. Patrick’s day 2016 |
-e 12/1 |
end at the start of december 1st of the current year (11/30 will be the last date included) |
-b thismonth |
all transactions on or after the 1st of the current month |
-p thismonth |
all transactions in the current month |
date:2016/3/17- |
the above written as queries instead |
date:-12/1 |
|
date:thismonth- |
|
date:thismonth |
Report intervals
A report interval can be specified so that commands like register, balance and activity will divide their reports into multiple
subperiods. The basic intervals can be selected with one of
-D/--daily, -W/--weekly,
-M/--monthly, -Q/--quarterly, or
-Y/--yearly. More complex intervals may be specified with a
period expression. Report intervals
can not be specified with a query, currently.
Period expressions
The -p/--period option accepts period expressions, a
shorthand way of expressing a start date, end date, and/or report
interval all at once.
Here’s a basic period expression specifying the first quarter of 2009. Note, hledger always treats start dates as inclusive and end dates as exclusive:
-p "from 2009/1/1 to 2009/4/1"
Keywords like “from” and “to” are optional, and so are the spaces, as long as you don’t run two dates together. “to” can also be written as “-”. These are equivalent to the above:
-p "2009/1/1 2009/4/1" |
-p2009/1/1to2009/4/1 |
-p2009/1/1-2009/4/1 |
Dates are smart dates, so if the current year is 2009, the above can also be written as:
-p "1/1 4/1" |
-p "january-apr" |
-p "this year to 4/1" |
If you specify only one date, the missing start or end date will be the earliest or latest transaction in your journal:
-p "from 2009/1/1" |
everything after january 1, 2009 |
-p "from 2009/1" |
the same |
-p "from 2009" |
the same |
-p "to 2009" |
everything before january 1, 2009 |
A single date with no “from” or “to” defines both the start and end date like so:
-p "2009" |
the year 2009; equivalent to “2009/1/1 to 2010/1/1” |
-p "2009/1" |
the month of jan; equivalent to “2009/1/1 to 2009/2/1” |
-p "2009/1/1" |
just that day; equivalent to “2009/1/1 to 2009/1/2” |
The argument of -p can also begin with, or be, a report interval expression. The basic
report intervals are daily, weekly,
monthly, quarterly, or yearly,
which have the same effect as the
-D,-W,-M,-Q, or
-Y flags. Between report interval and start/end dates (if
any), the word in is optional. Examples:
-p "weekly from 2009/1/1 to 2009/4/1" |
-p "monthly in 2008" |
-p "quarterly" |
Note that weekly, monthly,
quarterly and yearly intervals will always
start on the first day on week, month, quarter or year accordingly, and
will end on the last day of same period, even if associated period
expression specifies different explicit start and end date.
For example:
-p "weekly from 2009/1/1 to 2009/4/1" – starts on
2008/12/29, closest preceeding Monday |
-p "monthly in 2008/11/25" – starts on 2018/11/01 |
-p "quarterly from 2009-05-05 to 2009-06-01" - starts
on 2009/04/01, ends on 2009/06/30, which are first and last days of Q2
2009 |
-p "yearly from 2009-12-29" - starts on 2009/01/01,
first day of 2009 |
The following more complex report intervals are also supported:
biweekly, bimonthly,
every day|week|month|quarter|year,
every N days|weeks|months|quarters|years.
All of these will start on the first day of the requested period and end on the last one, as described above.
Examples:
-p "bimonthly from 2008" – periods will have boundaries
on 2008/01/01, 2008/03/01, … |
-p "every 2 weeks" – starts on closest preceeding
Monday |
-p "every 5 month from 2009/03" – periods will have
boundaries on 2009/03/01, 2009/08/01, … |
If you want intervals that start on arbitrary day of your choosing and span a week, month or year, you need to use any of the following:
every Nth day of week,
every <weekday>,
every Nth day [of month],
every Nth weekday [of month],
every MM/DD [of year],
every Nth MMM [of year],
every MMM Nth [of year].
Examples:
-p "every 2nd day of week" – periods will go from Tue
to Tue |
-p "every Tue" – same |
-p "every 15th day" – period boundaries will be on 15th
of each month |
-p "every 2nd Monday" – period boundaries will be on
second Monday of each month |
-p "every 11/05" – yearly periods with boundaries on
5th of Nov |
-p "every 5th Nov" – same |
-p "every Nov 5th" – same |
Show historical balances at end of 15th each month (N is exclusive end date):
hledger balance -H -p "every 16th day"
Group postings from start of wednesday to end of next tuesday (N is start date and exclusive end date):
hledger register checking -p "every 3rd day of week"
Depth limiting
With the --depth N option (short form: -N),
commands like account, balance and register will
show only the uppermost accounts in the account tree, down to level N.
Use this when you want a summary with less detail. This flag has the
same effect as a depth: query argument (so -2,
--depth=2 or depth:2 are basically
equivalent).
Pivoting
Normally hledger sums amounts, and organizes them in a hierarchy,
based on account name. The --pivot FIELD option causes it
to sum and organize hierarchy based on the value of some other field
instead. FIELD can be: code, description,
payee, note, or the full name (case
insensitive) of any tag. As with
account names, values containing colon:separated:parts will
be displayed hierarchically in reports.
--pivot is a general option affecting all reports; you
can think of hledger transforming the journal before any other
processing, replacing every posting’s account name with the value of the
specified field on that posting, inheriting it from the transaction or
using a blank value if it’s not present.
An example:
2016/02/16 Member Fee Payment
assets:bank account 2 EUR
income:member fees -2 EUR ; member: John Doe
Normal balance report showing account names:
$ hledger balance
2 EUR assets:bank account
-2 EUR income:member fees
--------------------
0
Pivoted balance report, using member: tag values instead:
$ hledger balance --pivot member
2 EUR
-2 EUR John Doe
--------------------
0
One way to show only amounts with a member: value (using a query, described below):
$ hledger balance --pivot member tag:member=.
-2 EUR John Doe
--------------------
-2 EUR
Another way (the acct: query matches against the pivoted “account name”):
$ hledger balance --pivot member acct:.
-2 EUR John Doe
--------------------
-2 EUR
Cost
The -B/--cost flag converts amounts to their cost at
transaction time, if they have a transaction price
specified.
Market value
The -V/--value flag converts reported amounts to their
current market value.
Specifically, when there is a market price (P directive) for the
amount’s commodity, dated on or before today’s date (or the report end date if specified), the
amount will be converted to the price’s commodity.
When there are multiple applicable P directives, -V chooses the most recent one, or in case of equal dates, the last-parsed one.
For example:
# one euro is worth this many dollars from nov 1
P 2016/11/01 € $1.10
# purchase some euros on nov 3
2016/11/3
assets:euros €100
assets:checking
# the euro is worth fewer dollars by dec 21
P 2016/12/21 € $1.03
How many euros do I have ?
$ hledger -f t.j bal -N euros
€100 assets:euros
What are they worth at end of nov 3 ?
$ hledger -f t.j bal -N euros -V -e 2016/11/4
$110.00 assets:euros
What are they worth after 2016/12/21 ? (no report end date specified, defaults to today)
$ hledger -f t.j bal -N euros -V
$103.00 assets:euros
Currently, hledger’s -V only uses market prices recorded with P directives, not transaction prices (unlike Ledger).
Currently, -V has a limitation in multicolumn balance reports: it uses the market prices on the report end date for all columns. (Instead of the prices on each column’s end date.)
Combining -B and -V
Using -B/–cost and -V/–value together is currently allowed, but the results are probably not meaningful. Let us know if you find a use for this.
Output destination
Some commands (print, register, stats, the balance commands) can
write their output to a destination other than the console. This is
controlled by the -o/--output-file option.
$ hledger balance -o - # write to stdout (the default)
$ hledger balance -o FILE # write to FILE
Output format
Some commands can write their output in other formats. Eg print and
register can output CSV, and the balance commands can output CSV or
HTML. This is controlled by the -O/--output-format option,
or by specifying a .csv or .html file
extension with -o/--output-file.
$ hledger balance -O csv # write CSV to stdout
$ hledger balance -o FILE.csv # write CSV to FILE.csv
Regular expressions
hledger uses regular expressions in a number of places:
- query terms, on the command line and in the
hledger-web search form:
REGEX,desc:REGEX,cur:REGEX,tag:...=REGEX - CSV rules conditional blocks:
if REGEX ... - account alias directives and
options:
alias /REGEX/ = REPLACEMENT,--alias /REGEX/=REPLACEMENT
hledger’s regular expressions come from the regex-tdfa library. In general they:
- are case insensitive
- are infix matching (do not need to match the entire thing being matched)
- are POSIX extended regular expressions
- also support GNU word boundaries (\<, \>, \b, \B)
- and parenthesised capturing groups and numeric backreferences in replacement strings
- do not support mode modifiers like (?s)
Some things to note:
In the
aliasdirective and--aliasoption, regular expressions must be enclosed in forward slashes (/REGEX/). Elsewhere in hledger, these are not required.In queries, to match a regular expression metacharacter like
$as a literal character, prepend a backslash. Eg to search for amounts with the dollar sign in hledger-web, writecur:\$.On the command line, some metacharacters like
$have a special meaning to the shell and so must be escaped at least once more. See Special characters.